If you need another reason to visit Big Sur in California, we have a whale of a reason for you. In late winter and early spring, thousands of gray whales, many with calves in tow, swim by this part of the Pacific coast as they migrate from the warm waters of Baja California to their summer feeding grounds in the Bering Sea. Come winter, they pass by again on the swim south. The entire round-trip route clocks in at about 12,000 miles, making gray whales among the longest migrators of the animal kingdom. Because they travel close to the coastline, it"s also one of the few whale migrations you can see from shore.
Gray days ahead in Monterey
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Diwali lights in Guwahati, India
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Festivus
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Northern gannets, Shetland Islands, Scotland
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Labor Day
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A little bit of Wonderland in New York City
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A duckling swimming in a water meadow, Suffolk, England
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Basking in the glow
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Irohazaka Road in fall, Nikko, Tochigi, Japan
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Fish River Canyon, Namibia
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Baltic Sea, Estonia
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Bald cypress trees in Georgia
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Women s History Month
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Hawaii Volcanoes National Park turns 103
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Breckenridge, Colorado
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Bridges to the past
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Fall colors below Mount Sneffels near Ridgway, Colorado
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World Photography Day
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International Jazz Day
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Blue Lagoon spa, Grindavík, Iceland
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Greetings from Asbury Park
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The Grand Départ: Tour de France begins
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Get on your bike and ride
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2022 FIFA World Cup
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Halfway Day
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Happy Cousins Day!
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The persistence of Perito Moreno
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Leaves of Grass
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Mapping courage in the Seventh Ward
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Antarctica Day
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Bask in the glow—It s World Turtle Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

